*24 February 1998
*introduction: relation of sports/leisure to earlier topics:
masculinity, professionalism, suburbs.
I. Leisure , Mass Culture, and Consumerism
A. Working Class leisure (based on Kasson Amusing the Millions
with notes from Roy Rosenzweig, 12 Hours for what You
Will,
B. Working Class Women (Peiss, Cheap Amusements )
C. Addams Spirit of Youth) discussed with refernce to middle
class (Progressives) attitudes as described in Gorman, Paul
R.,"Healthy recreation versus "exploiting pleasure" in the
progressive era, "in Left intellectuals & popular culture in
twentieth-century (1996) [Binder.Secondary]
D. Consumerism
1. general theory of rise of (Lears, No Place of Grace)
2. middle class women and consumerism (1) dept stores; and
(shoplifting)
II. Movies (based on May Screening Out the Past)
III. Sports
A. Interpreting Sports and the "new Sports History"
B. Baseball (discussion of Gelber article)
C. Football
1. As with professionalism and suburbanization this topic requires
careful definition of what is specific to the progressive era, since
the developments are rooted in the earlier period, and continue on to
our own day. The rise of mass culture begins in the 1880s, but takes
specific new forms during the progressive era, the movies in
particular. Likewise, baseball (1860s) and football (1880s) predated
the progressive era but are transformed between mid-1890s and 1920 in
various ways.
2. The topics to be considered look back to earlier themes in the
course (a) changing definitions of gender as America "modernizes" and
the cult of masculinity [Dubbert] ; (b) the role of the ":market" in
shaping perceptions [Wilson, Labor of Words and Schudsen]) and
forward to (c) "social control," and various questions connected with
women, immigration, and labor. The aim today is to see the ways the
study of popular culture and sports can enrich an understanding of
history in general.
3. on the surface, sports and new forms of leisure also seem to run
counter to themes of rationalization, organization, and efficiency
embodied in professionalization. Are they related? This relates to
the larger paradox that the progressive era was one of growing
rationalization, bureaucratization and professionalization of every
aspect of life, but also of cult of masculinity, strenuosity,
militarism (Dreiser, London and naturalists; TR and "Big Stick" Edgar
Rice Burroughs, Tarzan ]; and to the larger issue (discussed last
week) of the interpretation of the age as one of (a) rationalization
and a quest for efficiency and (b) moralism, emotionalism, nostalgia
rooted in status anxieties.
I. Leisure the Rise of "Mass Culture" (general)
(questions raised in Kasson Amusing the Millions, Peiss,
Cheap Amusements, and Addams, Spirit of Youth and other
such works as Rosenzweig, Eight Hours for What We Will,
A. Leisure and Working Class history.
* Kasson, (Amusing )
1.Amusement Parks (Kasson, Amusing) how changed from
1880s through progressive era . Cf. in Worcester? (Rosenzweig?) and
New York (Peiss).
a. Coney Island
Dates of major "parks" at Coney Island: Sea Lion (1895), Steeple
Chase (1897), Luna (1902, on site of Sea Lion), and Dreamland (ca.
1908)
a. how did Coney differ from genteel" culture of Central Park?
Columbia exposition? Significance of "Midway" at Columbian
Exposition
b. what social consequences? deference? "disaster" "technology as
spectacle? etc.
C. how does Coney Island compare with current ones: Disney World,
Great Adventure etc. Can one say that these parks change or cause new
social behavior? or simply reflect it?
2. saloons?
questions: (a) what is its value? its social function? what is the
"great era" of the saloon" culture? what is happening after 1900? (b)
what is role of saloon in creating masculinity (Rozenzweig p. 63).
Different consequences of the rise of saloon culture for men and
women? c. consequences for "labor solidarity" "radical protest? (d)
in what ways has "saloon" culture changed since the progressive era:
college student takeover in 1950s? singles bars?
3. Holidays? what different functions do 4th of July
observances serve for different ethnic groups? social classes?
implications of his argument for current "diversity" debates?
Examples of changing functions of other holidays: Christmas/New Year;
Halloween?
B. Working class women?
1. approach of Peiss, Working Class Amusements. what does she
think she is adding? what difference does it make to look at role of
working class women? (see more on her p.o.v. in comparison with Jane
Addams below).
* Questions:
1. what is the social construction of gender? do you believe gender
is "constructed" in significantly different ways in different
period?
2. what is "homosocial culture" "heterosocial"? example of each?
when/why did one give way to the other.
3. what is relation of working class and middle class? how is middle
class culture transformed by the developments Peiss describes?
4. what happens to "cheap amusements" during the later part of the
progressive era? were the often draconian "controls" imposed by the
middle class effective? Did they make any difference at all.
5. what is the overall affect of the commercialization of culture:
does it promote "Americanization" "individualism"? the decline of
ethnicity?
C. Addams, Spirit of Youth chs. 1, 4
*discussion of the ways Addams supports the analysis of the two
modern historians, as well as how her perspective is ultimately quite
different/ Discussion of the issue of whether Addams was a
bluestocking prude, as some later said. Or should we rethink our
image of progressive era women reformers..
1. what is the "new" situation she sees? what dates? Note
especially:
--commercialization of leisure
--vast numbers in new cities
--higher wages\(all pp. 4-6)
2. new forms of amusement. What does she identify? would they have
been the same in 1890 when Hull House was started.
--dance halls
--clothing (p. 8)
vaudeville (p. 17)
nickelodeon (p. 19)
--street music (p. 19). ("The street music has quite broken away from
all control")
--movies (as below)
3. social consequences
--tensions within family : the "good" brother (pp. 9-10)
--fear children will steal : so father gives them movie money (p. 91)
[cf. argument of Christopher Lasch, Haven in a Heartless
World]
4. does Jane Addams recognize social class? how does she describe it?
role of "respectability" in defining social lines? (cf. Rosenzweig on
same issue).
--"nice" girl's at dance halls
--"loutish tenement house youth"
--one working class culture?: a "more primitive code of morality"
5. Addams's preconceptions (as clue to middle class mentality in
general).
--young girls no longer "prized" for their innocence
--village green nostalgia
--Freud? sex susceptibility? cf. Peiss on heterosociability: is
Addams saying the same thing/)
--hierarchical culture: "in the direction of" (p. 82)
--role of science? Adams and "experts" (see pp 92-93)
6. holidays. p. 100 : "Labor Day processions are really becoming more
carefully planned and more picturesque"? would Rosenzweig agree? do
they judge this development the same?
7. on ethnicity and whether commercialization of culture destroys
(see Addams pp. 100-101).
D. Consumerism
*general impact of consumerism?
1. general theory of rise of (Lears, No Place of Grace; not
assigned )
2. middle class women and consumerism (1) dept. stores; and
(shoplifting)